I'm also -1 to an explicit code of conduct. Sure, once in a while someone has to step in with Wheaton's Law or what I can't resist calling Simon Says; but all it takes is a gentle reminder. Nobody here is genuinely contemptuous toward anyone else. The barrier of entry is too high -- the trolls are happy enough on reddit. ;)
On Apr 6, 2017 6:17 AM, "Andreas Abel" <andreas.a...@ifi.lmu.de> wrote: On 03.04.2017 10:42, Henning Thielemann wrote: > On Mon, 3 Apr 2017, Simon Peyton Jones via Libraries wrote: > > I’ve been talking to a couple of people about whether it would be >> useful to have an explicit Haskell Community Code of Conduct. Many >> online communities have one (e.g. Rust), and it might be helpful for >> everyone to have a concrete baseline rather than an unwritten >> standard. Any views on that? >> > > I think these Code of Conducts make things even worse because then some > people start to check every word against these codes. Instead I suggest > we make more use of humor. E.g. Carter Schonwald's comment about grumpy > people made me think about renaming my prelude-compat package to > grumpy-prelude. :-) > I agree with Henning. The discussion gets heated because people are passionate about Haskell; and the latter is a good thing. I rather stomach some insults on a mailing list than having a formal code of conduct. Severe violations of politeness can be pointed out without having such a formal code. We can apply common sense. -- Andreas Abel <>< Du bist der geliebte Mensch. Department of Computer Science and Engineering Chalmers and Gothenburg University, Sweden andreas.a...@gu.se http://www.cse.chalmers.se/~abela/ _______________________________________________ Libraries mailing list librar...@haskell.org http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/libraries
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